This is the test suites from a number of W3C Working Groups, including the HTML Working Group, the Web Apps Working Group, the Device APIs Working Group, and the Web Apps Security Working Group.
The tests are designed to be run from your local computer. The test environment requires Python 2.7+ (but not Python 3.x). You will also need a copy of OpenSSL. For users on Windows this is available from the openssl website.
To get the tests running, you need to set up the test domains in your
hosts
file. The following entries are required:
127.0.0.1 web-platform.test
127.0.0.1 www.web-platform.test
127.0.0.1 www1.web-platform.test
127.0.0.1 www2.web-platform.test
127.0.0.1 xn--n8j6ds53lwwkrqhv28a.web-platform.test
127.0.0.1 xn--lve-6lad.web-platform.test
Because web-platform-tests uses git submodules, you must ensure that these are up to date. In the root of your checkout, run:
git submodule update --init --recursive
The test environment can then be started using
python serve.py
This will start HTTP servers on two ports and a websockets server on
one port. By default one web server starts on port 8000 and the other
ports are randomly-chosen free ports. Tests must be loaded from the
first HTTP server in the output. To change the ports, edit the
config.json
file, for example, replacing the part that reads:
"http": [8000, "auto"]
to some port of your choice e.g.
"http":[1234, "auto"]
If you installed OpenSSL in such a way that running openssl
at a
command line doesn't work, you also need to adjust the path to the
OpenSSL binary. This can be done by adding a section to config.json
like:
"ssl": {"openssl": {"binary": "/path/to/openssl"}}
There is a test runner that is designed to provide a convenient way to run the web-platform tests in-browser. It will run testharness.js tests automatically but requires manual work for reftests and manual tests.
In order to use the runner, it is first necessary to generate a test
manifest. This must be called MANIFEST.json
and placed in the
web-platform-tests root.
You must do this step to use the test runner, even if you are not creating a new test suite.
To generate this file, from a command prompt at the root directory of the repo, run:
python tools/scripts/manifest.py
This tools/scripts/manifest.py
needs python html5lib
package.
If you have not installed it yet, run:
pip install html5lib
On Mac OS X, python is installed with Xcode, but pip is not. Try
sudo easy_install pip
if pip is not already on your system.
Running the tests requires that the test environment be activated as
described above. The runner can be found at /tools/runner/index.html
on the local server i.e.
http://web-platform.test:8000/tools/runner/index.html
in the default configuration.
The master branch is automatically synced to http://w3c-test.org/.
Pull requests that have been checked are automatically mirrored to http://w3c-test.org/submissions/.
Each top-level directory represents a W3C specification: the name matches the shortname used after the canonical address of the said specification under http://www.w3.org/TR/ .
For some of the specifications, the tree under the top-level directory represents the sections of the respective documents, using the section IDs for directory names, with a maximum of three levels deep.
So if you're looking for tests in HTML for "The History interface",
they will be under html/browsers/history/the-history-interface/
.
Various resources that tests depend on are in common
, images
, and
fonts
.
If you're looking at a section of the specification and can't figure out where the directory is for it in the tree, just run:
node tools/scripts/id2path.js your-id
In the vast majority of cases the only branch that you should need
to care about is master
.
There is another branch called CR
. This is a strict subset of
master
that is limited to features that are found in the Candidate
Recommendation version of the relevant specifications.
If you see other branches in the repository, you can generally safely
ignore them. Please note that branches prefixed with temp/
are
temporary branches and can get deleted at some point. So don't
base any work off them unless you want to see your work destroyed.
Save the Web, Write Some Tests!
Absolutely everyone is welcome (and even encouraged) to contribute to test development, so long as you fulfill the contribution requirements detailed in the Contributing Guidelines. No test is too small or too simple, especially if it corresponds to something for which you've noted an interoperability bug in a browser.
The way to contribute is just as usual:
- fork this repository (and make sure you're still relatively in sync with it if you forked a while ago);
- create a branch for your changes:
git checkout -b your-name/topic
; - make your changes;
- push that to your repo;
- and send in a pull request based on the above.
Please make your pull requests either to master
or to a feature
branch (but not to CR
).
We can sometimes take a little while to go through pull requests because we have to go through all the tests and ensure that they match the specification correctly. But we look at all of them, and take everything that we can.
If you wish to contribute actively, you're very welcome to join the [email protected] mailing list (low traffic) by signing up to our mailing list. The mailing list is archived.
Join us on irc #testing (irc.w3.org, port 6665). The channel is archived.
Sometimes you may want to add a script to the repository that's meant to be used from the command line, not from a browser (e.g., a script for generating test files). If you want to ensure (e.g., or security reasons) that such scripts won't be handled by the HTTP server, but will instead only be usable from the command line, then place them in either:
- the
tools
subdir at the root of the repository, or - the
tools
subdir at the root of any top-level directory in the repository which contains the tests the script is meant to be used with
Any files in those tools
directories won't be handled by the HTTP server; instead the
server will return a 404 if a user navigates to the URL for a file within them.
If you want to add a script for use with a particular set of tests but there isn't yet any
tools
subdir at the root of a top-level directory in the repository containing those
tests, you can create a tools
subdir at the root of that top-level directory and place
your scripts there.
For example, if you wanted to add a script for use with tests in the notifications
directory, create the notifications/tools
subdir and put your script there.